INDEPENDENCE (Inyo County) 
The trip began in a bus. It ended in a bus. On the way eight
people  and possibly 11  were murdered.
In Death Valley 125 miles southeast of
here, a green-and-white former school bus marks where the nomadic
hippie clan led by Charles Manson finally ended its journey.
From there, 26 members of the Manson
"family" were brought under arrest to Independence,
a small town in the shadow of the Sierra Nevada.
Sheriff's officers here thought the hippie
band was guilty of car theft. And, noting that even the women
among them wore sheath knives, possibly worse, they put out the
names of the 26 in inter-city teletypes.
When detectives from Los Angeles arrived
to question members of the family, and took nine of them away,
local officers found out why they were wanted.
The officers heard the name "Tate."
They saw the penal code section for which they were wanted: 187.
Murder.
Manson, 34, who has a five-page criminal
record, including assault with a deadly weapon, theft, arson
and car theft, is in the Inyo County jail here. No charges have
been filed against him in the Tate case.
But authorities say he was the ringleader
of the band of wanderers whose members included at least a half-dozen
who specialized in murder. Investigators said followers sometimes
spoke of him as "Jesus."
In a dimly lit Independence motel room,
where paint peeled off the ceiling over the bed where an infant
sucked a pacifier, two of the young women who deserted comfortable,
middle-class homes to follow Manson described him Monday night:
"He was magnetic," said Sandra
Good Pugh, 26. "His motions were like magic, it seemed like.
The first time I saw him he was petting a cat. I don't know why
that struck me, but he seemed so kind."
"He gave
off a lot of magic," said Lynn Fromme, 21. "Everyone
was always so happy around him. But he was a sort of changeling.
He seemed to change every time I saw him. He seemed ageless..."
Manson is a short man, with brown hair
and eyes, who is a musician, the women said.
"The first time I heard him sing,"
said Mrs. Pugh, "it was like an angel. He wrote songs. Made
them up as he went along. Some were beautiful, happy songs. Others
would be sad and moving."
The Manson family started from the Haight-Ashbury
in San Francisco on April 12, 1968, in an old school bus converted
into living quarters for 14 young men and women.
Mrs. Pugh and Miss Fromme weren't with
him, then. The family's membership shifted slightly almost daily,
as some left, others joined. On the way south from San Francisco
the newest member arrived: a baby born in the bus "somewhere
along the line."
They were financing their trip on a credit
card brought with her by Patricia Krenwinkel when she defected
from the middle class one day in September 1967. She had apparently
met Manson, and had left town with him immediately.
It was at an abandoned movie ranch near
Los Angeles, where the hippies had established a commune last
August, that Mrs. Pugh and Miss Fromme joined the family. There,
police say, they converted stolen Volkswagens into dune buggies.
Then Manson moved again. It was a different
bus, but a similar exodus; everyone climbed aboard. They moved
quickly.
This time it was to Death Valley.
Investigators said the men again opened
a Volkswagen theft ring. It was for this  and chasing miners
off with knives  that National Park Service rangers, California
Highway Patrolmen and sheriff's officers arrested the 26 members
of the family.
The two young women said that they noticed
the men leaving on "four-day hikes on the desert."
But, they said, they knew of no car thievery or murder.
After the mass arrest, they were taken
into custody by Los Angeles detectives, questioned and released.
Mrs. Pugh was charged by authorities here with possession of
a stolen pistol, and the girls are waiting at Independence for
her court date there Dec. 15.